The Truth About Crypto
A Practical, Easy-to-Understand Guide to Bitcoin, Blockchain, NFTs, and Other Digital Assets
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- £8.49
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- £8.49
Publisher Description
A TOP FINANCE BOOK OF 2022 by THE NEXT BIG IDEA CLUB
A SABEW BEST IN BUSINESS BOOK AWARDS FINALIST
A straightforward, practical guide to the newest frontier in investment strategy—crypto—from #1 New York Times bestselling author and personal finance expert Ric Edelman.
Blockchain and bitcoin are here to stay—and as the Bank of England stated, this new technology could “transform the global financial system.” No wonder PWC says blockchain technology will add $2 trillion to the world’s $80 trillion economy by 2030. Indeed, blockchain technology and the digital assets it makes possible are revolutionary, the most profound innovation for commerce since the invention of the internet.
And yet, the average investor—and the investment advisors who manage two-thirds of all their money—aren’t aware of all this, or of the incredible investment opportunities now available. Fortunately, Ric Edelman, one of the most influential experts in the financial field, shows investors how they can engage and thrive in today’s new investment marketplace.
Featuring the prophetic insights you’d expect from one of most acclaimed financial advisors, The Truth About Crypto is fun to read and easy to understand—and most importantly gives readers the sound, practical advice we all need to succeed with this new asset class. Best of all, Edelman shows how blockchain works, the difference between digital currency and digital assets, and a comprehensive look at every aspect of the field. This book is a must-read guide if you want to achieve investment success today.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
"Blockchain technology and the digital assets it makes possible are revolutionary" enthuses Rowan University lecturer Edelman (The Truth About Money) in this handy survey. Finance professionals often have a hard time understanding this new asset class, he suggests, because it has "nothing in common with anything have learned about." He helps bridge that gap with intense enthusiasm: blockchain is "Internet 3.0," he writes. It "replaces the trust economy with an authentication economy" and as more banks develop blockchain technology, will add "nearly $2 trillion to the $80 trillion global economy by 2030." Edelman discusses the history of bitcoin, describes how crypto works (with easy to grasp definitions, for instance, of decentralized, aka "distributed across millions of computers around the world"), lays out the technology's potential positive impact (60% of the world's unbanked people have smartphones, so could access digital assets), and assesses whether it's too late to buy in (spoiler alert: it's not). While his tone sometimes borders on pandering in his attempts to persuade readers they're smarter than the slow-moving "establishment," this is nonetheless a rare bird: an actually understandable guide to cryptocurrency. Those wondering what all the fuss is about will find this a great resource.